Of one mind
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Lolita Harper
They represent four different charities all fishing for money from
the same pool: the Newport-Mesa community.
The Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation, Y-ME National Breast
Cancer Assn., Hoag Cancer Center and Chao Family Comprehensive Cancer
Center at UC Irvine Medical Center are each heavy-hitters in a
shopping benefit hosted Tuesday by Bloomingdale’s in Fashion Island.
On paper, it would seem the women representing each of these
organizations are in competition. Who can bring in the most shoppers?
Who can raise the most awareness? Who will walk away with the biggest
check?
One might imagine a fierce rivalry, closed-door meetings and
antagonism. In reality, the women all sit around the same table one
morning last week in the Bloomingdale’s cafe, 59th and Lex, and chat
like old friends.
“Orange County Breast Cancer community is very unique -- how we
all work together,” said Sandy Finestone, the director of the Hoag
Cancer Center. “We are not competitive, we are supportive.”
The friendship was not more evident than when Finestone, the last
to arrive at the 11 a.m. meeting, came limping to the table.
Jennifer Anderson, Jeanette Morrow and Donna Sousa-Wright were
talking about shoes, pointing to Bloomingdale’s representative Erin
Bianchi’s plaid, pointed-closed-toe heels. They were “great,” the
group decided.
Finestone propped her broken foot up on the chair, which was
dressed in a glamorous orthopedic booth.
“Do you like mine?” she said.
Apparently, Finestone was walking out of one of her many meetings,
for one of the many boards she sits on, and tripped.
“I was rushing and I fell nose first,” she said, chuckling. “There
were papers everywhere, all sprawled out in front of me, and there I
am, on the ground, laughing. I didn’t even know it was broken for a
couple of weeks.”
Finestone’s hand gestures, facial expressions and semi-reenactment
of the event made the table burst into laughter. A few shoppers in
the cosmetics section glanced over to see what the fuss was about but
the women didn’t notice.
Finestone’s entrance was representative of the rest of the women’s
meeting.
They cracked jokes, talk about common friends, compliment outfits,
good-naturedly rib each other and still manage to represent their
respective organizations to the fullest.
And even though they were fashionable women, sitting in the middle
of a internationally renowned shopping venue, their attention never
once strayed from the topic at hand. Longing glances at the plush
wool coats, shimmering jewelry and brand-name sunglasses were never
shot across the room.
When it came to raising money for breast cancer, their eyes
lighted up and the pace of their speech increased. Ideas flew across
the table and the women shared strategies on how to get shopper in
the store for Tuesday’s benefit.
Bloomingdale’s has pledged to give a 15% discount Tuesday to each
shopper that presents a $10 ticket, denoting their support of a
respective charity. Tickets will have been distributed before hand,
by the respective representatives and will also be on sale at the
door. The money raised from sales of the tickets, will go directly to
the charities -- there are seven total participating -- and the
retailer will also present each organization with an undisclosed,
flat amount.
Sure, Sousa-Wright may prefer Jane Doe to buy a ticket from Y-ME
but has no problem giving tips to “newcomer” Anderson on how to drum
up her sales.
“One group can’t do it all,” Finestone said.
“There are too many people to help,” Anderson chimed in.
“There are great needs all over this Orange County... We all want
this to be successful and we all benefit from this,” Sousa-Wright
added.
“Our focus is on helping people and we can’t get stuck on things
like competitive nature -- that is not an issue,” Morrow concluded.
“We are bosom buddies.”
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